After watching nonstop news coverage on a variety of stations, what strikes me is how uniformly mainstream media is subtly (and maybe not so subtly) disapproving of the no-indict verdict. The media's job is to present the facts, not take sides. Okay, I'm naive. But I have to wonder how much the media is feeding the chaos and the public frenzy to destroy Wilson.
In particular, interview after interview (of the Brown parents, Brown's friend, Brown's attorneys, etc. suggest where the media sympathies lie and, moreover, focus on "how did the decision make you feel?" (stupid question) or "Do you believe Darren Wilson's testimony?" (ditto), and make little or no reference to the forensic evidence. In a case like this, it's all a jury has to go on. Otherwise, it comes down to he said/she said between all the witnesses. And from what I understand, the forensic evidence was pretty clear and supported Wilson's account, as well as the account of (some) of the other witnesses. Moreover, the media is completely ignoring the fact that Brown is on camera committing the strongarm robbery literally moments before the fatal altercation. He has proven himself to be a thug with little fear of retribution. It doesn't take a huge leap of imagination to visualize him carrying that stance forward to the moment he meets Wilson.
It chills me how solidly masses of people are coming down on the side of an out-of-control thug and rejecting the testimony of a police officer, when the evidence supports the police officer, as does their patterns of behavior leading up to the altercation. What does this portend? I can see police officers pulling back from using force in the future, for fear of being in the same situation as Wilson. I can see more officers being murdered in the line of duty. I can see good men and women choosing other careers because of the unrealistic standards and potentially abusive situations they will be subject to as an officer.
Something else: This situation has so dramatically deepened the color breach in this country. You see white journalists (albeit mouthing support for the protestors, directly or indirectly), white police offers, and then black protestors, black family members, black attorneys. Why haven't any black police officers spoken up publicly in support of their brother Darren Wilson? Why haven't any intellectuals spoken out publicly for the rule of law? Why has the impetus of mob force (which is what all of this is) silenced any other voice? I know why in part--because if you're white, you're terrified of being perceived as racist. And to say the wrong thing in the wrong place is to be labelled.
It's all so sad.